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2. The Last Days of The Local Paper.
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *NEWSPAPER closures , *DEMOCRACY , *JOURNALISM , *PUBLISHING - Abstract
The article reports on the state of local newspapers across the U.S., particularly their high rate of closure and their rapidly declining power and influence. Also cited are the questionable search by members of the Kansas police on the offices of the "Marion County Record" in August 2024 and the positive developments that could bolster journalism and democracy in the country.
- Published
- 2024
3. A Global Imperative: Sustainable Printing Beyond the Use of Recycled Paper.
- Subjects
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RECYCLED paper , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *PAPER recycling , *CORPORATE vice-presidents , *SUPPLY & demand , *WEBINARS , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The article discusses the importance of the use of recycled paper to ensure sufficient supply of printing paper in the graphics art industry amidst the increase in demand. Topics inlcude the incompatibility of some printing technologies with paper recycling systems, the global market demand for paper materials, as well as the paper requirements in regions like Europe, North America and Asia.
- Published
- 2021
4. THE PAPER TRAIL.
- Author
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GESSEN, MASHA
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *NEWSPAPER editors , *JOURNALISM & politics , *NOBEL Peace Prize ,RUSSIAN politics & government - Abstract
The article features Russian newspaper "Novaya Gazeta" and its editor-in-chief Dmitry Muratov. Topics discussed include the way Muratov opted to use the prize money he earned together with the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize in various charitable activities, the publication of various social and political news in Russia by the journal under the leadership of Muratov, and brief details about the career and accomplishments of Muratov in journalism.
- Published
- 2021
5. Free Press, Regulated Competition: The Finnish Newspaper Cartel, 1910s–1970s.
- Author
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Kuorelahti, Elina and Jensen-Eriksen, Niklas
- Subjects
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FREEDOM of the press , *CARTELS , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *CONSUMER price indexes , *WORLD War II , *NEWSPAPERS , *CIVIL war , *PRICES - Abstract
This paper examines newspaper cartels, a largely unoccupied field in media history, from the perspective of longevity. We analyse Finnish newspaper industry from the 1910s to 1970s and show that newspapers sought to regulate various aspects of competition, such as subscription prices, advertisement tariffs, and newsprint prices. Data indicates that political rivalry shaped the newspaper cartel collaboration until late 1950s: the cartel was set up by right-wing and centrist papers and, unlike in other Nordic countries, the Social Democratic press remained outside of the association until 1958. Political shocks of the Finnish Civil War in 1918 and the Second World War also changed the composition of the cartel. The era of private cartels in the newspaper industry gradually started to fade away as a result of anti-cartel laws in the 1960s and governmental anti-inflation measures in the 1970s. We conclude that the economics of newspaper industry and the cartelisation of the wider business environment, newsprint suppliers in particular, encouraged newspapers to co-operate with each other. The results of this article increase the understanding on the collaborative and competitive environment of newspaper companies, but also contributes to broader questions on cartels and their inner dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Political scandals, media systems, and ideological polarization: the case of the emeritus King Juan Carlos I.
- Author
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Ortiz-González, Azahara and Berganza, Rosa
- Subjects
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POLITICAL corruption , *POLARIZATION (Social sciences) , *ELECTRONIC paper , *POLITICAL systems , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
Research on scandals is a privileged way to explore jointly media and political systems, and the links between them. In this article, we explore how the coverage of political corruption in digital native and paper newspapers has the characteristics of politically oriented scandals (Mancini, 2019), which are more common in polarized pluralist systems, like the Spanish one. To do so, we have studied the scandals related to the former King of Spain, Juan Carlos I. In the research, we have analyzed the evolution of media coverage on the topic between July 1, 2014, and March 1, 2021 in three different paper newspapers (El País, El Mundo and ABC). During this period, 889 journalistic pieces were published in these three newspapers. Also, we have conducted a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a sample of 334 pieces from the last year covered by the research (2020-2021) on El País, El Mundo and ABC and on digital natives El Español and elDiario.es. The results show a political instrumentalization of the scandal, media partisanship (the media support some political parties' positions) in El País, elDiario.es and ABC; and ideological polarization (analyzed content presents two politically opposed groups) in ABC and elDiario.es. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Paper War between The Old Maid and The Connoisseur: Additional Exchanges.
- Author
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Vance, Michaela
- Subjects
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HISTORY of newspapers , *JOURNALISTS' attitudes , *SINGLE women , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *WOMEN publishers - Abstract
The article explores the eighteenth-century newspaper war between journalist Mary Singleton of "The Old Maid" and Mr. Town of "The Connoisseur." Topics discussed include the documentation of the exchanges between Singleton and Mr. Town on issues such as competition and hypocrisy, the way Mr. Town published criticisms of Singleton in "The Connoisseur," and the response offered by Singleton about the involvement of single women in newspaper publishing.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Short-run Decisions Threaten Papers' Long-run Viability.
- Author
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Lacy, Stephen, Stamm, Michael, and Martin, Hugh
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *PERIODICAL circulation , *ADVERTISING , *ECONOMIC competition , *INVESTMENTS , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article analyzes the history of the newspaper industry and attributes the current crisis to managerial short-run decisions from 1985 to 2004. It attributes reduced local market growth to declining circulation and maximized advertising prices. Reasons cited for the decline in circulation include clustering or buying newspapers within the same region to cut costs and reduce competition, lower quality newspapers because of lack of investment in the newsroom and rising costs of advertising.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Classifying Hindi News Using Various Machine Learning and Deep Learning Techniques.
- Author
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Chhabra, Anusha, Arora, Monika, Sharma, Arpit, Singh, Harsh, Verma, Saurabh, Jain, Rachna, Acharya, Biswaranjan, Gerogiannis, Vassilis C., Tzimos, Dimitrios, and Kanavos, Andreas
- Subjects
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DEEP learning , *SPAM email , *MACHINE learning , *NATURAL language processing , *SENTIMENT analysis , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *ORAL communication - Abstract
Text classification involves organizing textual information into predefined classes, a task which is particularly useful in domains like sentiment analysis, spam detection, and content labeling. In India, where a massive amount of information is generated daily through newspapers and social media, Hindi is one of the most widely used and spoken languages. However, there is limited research on Hindi text classification and, particularly, regarding Hindi news classification. This paper presents a research study to classify Hindi news articles published in Hindi-language newspapers in India by using and comparing various Machine Learning (ML) and Deep Learning (DL) algorithms. To prepare the textual news data for classification, pre-processing and feature engineering techniques, such as count vectorizer, Tf-Idf vectorizer and Doc2Vec, were used and applied to convert texts into vectors. This pre-processing step on the textual data was very challenging due to the presence of multimodal words, conjunctions, punctuation, and special characters in Hindi texts. The study considered Hindi news headlines from predetermined categories (Science, Sports, Entertainment and Business) and, among the different ML and DL models tested and evaluated, Linear Regression with Doc2Vec vectorizer and SGD classifier with Tf-Idf vectorizer produced best accuracies of 97.04% and 96.59%, respectively. The best performing DL model was found to be the Bi-LSTM with an accuracy of approximately 97% on the testing data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. LIBEL SUIT LEAVES LOCAL PAPER IN CRISIS.
- Author
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Peck, Gretchen A.
- Subjects
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LIBEL & slander lawsuits , *ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *NEWSPAPER sections, columns, etc. , *COLUMNS , *RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
The article reports that jury decided in 2016 that Gawker Media held liable for defamation against a certain larger-than-life pro wrestler, the average American likely did not pay much attention to the outcome beyond perhaps a momentary fascination with the salacious video at the center of the case. Topics include examines the American press paid close attention and for good reason.
- Published
- 2022
11. FOOTBALL COVERAGE IN THE PAPERS OF THE SHEFFIELD TELEGRAPH, c.1890-1915.
- Author
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Jackson, Alexander
- Subjects
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MASS media & sports , *SPORTS journalism , *FOOTBALL , *NEWSPAPER sports sections , *FOOTBALL players , *FOOTBALL teams , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *HILLSBOROUGH Stadium Disaster, Sheffield, England, 1989 - Abstract
The article discusses a study on football coverage in the "Sheffield Telegraph" newspaper in 1980 until 1915 in England. Sheffield became England's fifth largest city in the 1900s, and eventually founded the world's oldest football club, Sheffield F.C. in 1857. The newspaper regularly carried photos of the League matches in 1910 and the paper was referred to as "The Green 'Un". On January 14, 1914, the "Green 'Un" was expanded to 8 pages which featured columns about players and teams. It concludes that the paper was important to the development of the local, regional and national identifies of football.
- Published
- 2009
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12. PAPER, PRINTING AND THE PRINTING PRESS.
- Author
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Gunaratne, Shelton A.
- Subjects
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HISTORY of printing , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *EUROCENTRISM , *HISTORY - Abstract
Abstract / The Chinese used paper for two or three centuries before CE 105, when Cai Lun, director of imperial arsenals under Emperor He of the later Han dynasty (25-220), officially reported the 'invention' of paper. The Chinese began the first printed newspaper, Jing Bao (originally Di Bao), in 713 under the Tang dynasty (618-907); and it continued until the collapse of the Manchu dynasty in 1911. In 868, Wang Jie printed the famous Diamond Sutra (Kumarajiva's Vajracchedika Prajna Paramita), the earliest printed book in existence. Xylography (block printing) was known in China for at least four centuries before 932, when Prime Minister Feng Dao supposedly 'invented' it by directing the printing of the 11 Confucian classics filling 130 volumes - a task that took 20 years. Alchemist Bi Sheng experimented with movable type for eight years from1041, four cen-turies before Gutenberg. In 1313, Wang Zheng traced the development of movable type in his Nong shu, a treatise on agriculture. Chinese also made typography a fine art and produced numerous books. Printing from movable type reached its highest development in Korea from 1403 onwards. If the invention of printing ushered in the second communication revolution, then the celebration of Gutenberg as the inventor of printing represents a distortion of human history by those trying to document a so-called European 'exceptionalism' of the 15th century. The horizontally integra-tive macrohistory approach should set the record straight. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. As community papers struggle, one island news outlet thrives by sticking to shoeleather tactics.
- Author
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Chiarito, Bob
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *TOURISM websites , *FISHING - Abstract
The article focuses on the newspaper "Manitoulin Expositor" and "The Manitoulin West Recorder" are owned by 73-year-old Rick McCutcheon. It mentions that The Manitoulin Expositor covers most of the Manitoulin island with a weekly circulation of 6,000 the western part of the island is covered by The Manitoulin West Recorder, circulation 1,500. It also mentions that tourism websites and fishing derbies are helpful in maintaining community loyalty.
- Published
- 2019
14. EVALUATION OF THE NEWS PUBLISHED RELATED TO DISTINGUISHED DIPLOMATS IN LA GAZETTE AND GAZETTE D'AMSTERDAM IN 1730 WITH A PERSPECTIVE OF VIATIC LITERATURE.
- Author
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FAKİROĞLU, Osman Tayfun
- Subjects
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OTTOMAN Empire , *DIPLOMATS , *INSURGENCY , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *LITERARY sources , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *EUROPEAN history - Abstract
In this study, it is aimed that the two newspapers published in 18th century about Western European diplomacy seen in Ottoman lands are analysed in the perspective of viatic literature. Those two newspapers are La Gazette and Gazette d'Amsterdam. Both of the newspapers are published in French. La Gazette is published in France and majority of the news which could disturb French sovereignity were censured. As for Gazette d'Amsterdam, it is published in the Netherlands. The news related to diplomacy, economics, royalty, social and daily issues are released. However, in this study we handled the news in terms of distinguished diplomats who worked in diplomatic mission in the Istanbul during 1730. The year 1730 is important in terms of Ottoman history and Western European history since it was the period when the conflicts between the diplomats living in Istanbul took place and Patrona Halil rebellion emerged. In this article, diplomatic issues about English Embassy, Venetian Embassy, French Embassy and Ottoman Consul in Vienna. The diplomats appointed to East are selected intentionally by their sovereignty probably because they were thought to be a successful social observer and a diplomat. Taking this fact into consideration, these diplomats can be evaluated as a voyager as they travel throughout the countries and different cities in the same country by establishing a good communication with the locals with his delegation. They wrote daily official dispatches to their ministry of foreign affairs with a language of diplomacy. Thus, it is suggested in this paper that those papers should be evaluated as sources of diplomatic literature and as a sub-category of voyage literature. The reason why those reports are evaluated as diplomatic literature is that those reports include social, religious, economic issues as daily reports which have its own style, word use and other textual features. In this study, qualitative document analysis method is used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. TAKING THE PAPER OUT OF NEWS.
- Author
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Thurman, Neil and Myllylahti, Merja
- Subjects
- *
ONLINE journalism , *FINNISH newspapers , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *NEWSPAPERS , *ELECTRONIC publishing , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *FINANCE - Abstract
Using in-depth interviews, newsroom observation, and internal documents, this case study presents and analyses changes that have taken place at Finnish financial daily Taloussanomat since it stopped printing on 28 December 2007 to focus exclusively on digital delivery via the Web, email, and mobile. It reveals the savings that can be achieved when a newspaper no longer prints and distributes a physical product; but also the revenue lost from subscriptions and print advertising. The consequences of a newspaper's decision to go online-only are examined as they relate to its business model, website traffic, and editorial practice. The findings illustrate the extent to which the medium rather than the content it carries determines news consumption patterns, show the differing attention a newspaper and its online substitute command, and reveal the changes to working patterns journalists can expect in the online-only environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Paper to the People.
- Author
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Christopher, L. Carol
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *ELECTRONIC newspapers , *ELECTRONIC publishing , *ELECTRONIC publications , *ELECTRONIC journals , *WEBSITES , *INTERNET - Abstract
The article reports on the strategy of Europa Press Holdings Co. in the creation its daily national newspaper, and explores the development of "Avastar," an electronic newspaper, by Bild.T-Online.de AG & Co. KG in Europe. It states that Europa Press Holdings' research and development team has created a website which provides an opportunity for customers to contribute ideas and opinions on the creation of the newspaper. In addition, the company has also created a marketing campaign and contest which focus on employing skilled individuals that will help in designing the publication. Bild.T-Online.de has used the website Second Life for the publication of "Avastar" in the Internet to attract a large group of readers.
- Published
- 2008
17. How Ownership, Competition Affect Papers' Financial Performance.
- Author
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Chang, Kuang-Kuo and Zeldes, Geri Alumit
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER ownership , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *PUBLISHING - Abstract
Presents an overview of a study on the effects of public ownership and competition on newspaper operations. Association between public ownership and financial management pressure; Method used; Findings of the study; Conclusions.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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18. Information about Earthquakes in Russia at the Beginning of 19th Century in Periodicals.
- Author
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Mokrushina, N. G. and Tatevossian, R. E.
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NINETEENTH century , *EARTHQUAKES , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *INFORMATION resources , *NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
In this paper we attempt to determine the sources of original information on earthquakes among newspapers published in Russia in 1809–1819. It is revealed that the information presented in periodicals was not used to the full extent in compiling the main historical catalogs of earthquakes in Russia. Paradoxically, instead of the original reports from Russian newspapers, often greatly abridged and distorted information was cited from translated versions and European newspapers, as well as from descriptive catalogs of earthquakes compiled in Paris and London. It is shown that in Russia there were several communication channels for transmitting messages from distant localities to the center. Not all incoming information was published; some of it ended up in the archives, usually as reports to the authorities. Some information remained in personal correspondence. Therefore, research on historical seismicity cannot be limited to searching for information in newspapers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Media Pluralism in Latvia 2002–2020: Results and Insights from a Quantitative Exploratory Study of Newspapers.
- Author
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Ungure, Elza
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *NEWSPAPERS , *PLURALISM , *ATTRIBUTION of news , *QUANTITATIVE research , *FREEDOM of information - Abstract
This paper offers an overview of specific characteristics of newspaper output and publishing trends in Latvia, aiming to assess whether the newspaper output in Latvia plays the roles theoretically ascribed to newspapers, namely, the roles related to democracy and community building. It is argued that media pluralism is crucial for executing these roles. The assessment of pluralism is based on an exploratory analysis of quantitative data on newspaper output in Latvia. The analysis is accompanied by a discussion of challenges experienced in the newspaper publishing field in Latvia and elsewhere that can potentially hinder the ability of newspapers to execute the roles theoretically ascribed to them. Finally, insights gained during the research process are shared regarding research required to further the analysis of newspaper output in terms of plurality in the sense of access to different news sources and, by extension, perspectives and public representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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20. LOGISTICS IN PAPER ORDERING AND WAREHOUSING.
- Author
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SCHULT, W. ERIC
- Subjects
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PAPER industry , *PRINTING industry , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *WAREHOUSES , *PUBLISHING - Abstract
The article discusses improving the paper ordering and warehouse operations of printing companies. Topics explored include the paper needs of most newspaper publishers and commercial print businesses, the proper management of inventory to meet needs of clients, and the statement issued by regional operations director Ron Smith of "News Herald" daily newspaper regarding significant printing technologies.
- Published
- 2014
21. Profits up, circulation down for Thomson papers in 80s.
- Author
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Lacy, Stephen and Martin, Hugh I.
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER circulation , *PROFIT , *MASS media , *MARKETING , *NEWSPAPER publishing ,REVENUE - Abstract
This comparison of Thomson papers with comparable newspapers indicates they lost more revenue and circulation during 1980s when high profit goals were set. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Paper Emperors. The Rise of Australia's Newspaper Empires.
- Author
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Cryle, Denis
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER publishing , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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23. Room Temperature Superconductor Paper Retracted by Journal Nature.
- Author
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Subbaraman, Nidhi
- Published
- 2023
24. An outlook multiple: The ontological multiplicity of the Met Office's 3‐month outlook.
- Author
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Manktelow, Chris
- Subjects
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OFFICES , *ATMOSPHERIC models , *MULTIPLICITY (Mathematics) , *SCIENTIFIC communication , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
This paper uses a material semiotic approach to explore how the ontological multiplicity of climate affects the communication of seasonal climate outlooks (SCO). The analysis is based on an ethnography of the UK Meteorological Office's (Met Office) 3‐month outlook, which predicts seasonal climate variability for the whole of the UK over the next 3 months. I advance geographical knowledge by critiquing a tendency among SCO providers to assume that stakeholders only treat the climate as a descriptive index of weather trends. Instead, I propose that the idea of a normal climate, which is central to this mode of communication, is an effect of materially diverse professional practices, such as running seasonal climate models, making contingency plans, or writing and publishing newspaper articles. These socio‐material practices enact multiple understandings, or ontologies, of what the climate is, which then shape how SCO are understood and used. The analysis identifies moments where ontologies of climate converge and diverge and discusses the effect that these moments have on the communication of the Met Office's 3‐month outlook. The paper concludes by assessing the theoretical significance of material semiotic approaches for geographical research into the multiplicity of climate, as well as the practical significance of this work for scientists who are involved in communicating climate information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Effects of foreign ownership on media content: Thomson papers' coverage of Quebec independence vote.
- Author
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Hollifield, C. Ann
- Subjects
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NEWSPAPER ownership , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
Presents information on a study on the impact of foreign ownership on newspaper content. Thomson Newspapers company as the subject of the study; Hypotheses; Methodology; Findings; Discussion and conclusions.
- Published
- 1999
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26. Children for sail: British child migrants as colonial commodities.
- Author
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von Benzon, Nadia
- Subjects
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CHILDREN of immigrants , *BRITISH people , *POOR children , *HISTORICAL geography , *CHILD consumers , *NEWSPAPER publishing ,BRITISH colonies - Abstract
This paper addresses the historical geography of British child migration to New Zealand between 1949 and 1954; a period that marked the 'beginning of the end' of centuries of state-sanctioned emigration of unaccompanied, poor, British children. This particular child migration programme was executed under the dual motivations of boosting the New Zealand economy through population increase, whilst 'rescuing' British children living in poverty. This paper seeks to explore the concept of the commodification of children through an historical account based on thematic analysis of New Zealand newspaper articles published between 1910 and 2017. This analysis demonstrates the way newspaper stories both reflect social discourse – in this instance concerning the desirability of the hosting of British child migrants – and act as a socio-technical device that shapes them – marketing the children to potential host families. The paper demonstrates how transnational geo-political and geo-economic flows of unaccompanied children complicate biocommodification and caring relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. LOOSE PAPER LOADING.
- Author
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Rosenberg, Jim
- Subjects
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PAPER recycling , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *WASTE management , *DUMP trucks , *PERIODICALS - Abstract
The article provides information on paper waste handling systems of various newspaper companies in the United States. Waste paper comes from white slab waste and leftover inserts. An automatic system capable of automatically loading loose paper into a trailer has financial benefits to "Orlando Sentinel." The waste handling plant of the "Washington Post" in Springfield, Virginia consists of a cart dumper.
- Published
- 2005
28. JOSIP VILFAN V PRVEM DESETLETJU PANEVROPSKEGA GIBANJA.
- Author
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RAHTEN, Andrej
- Subjects
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EUROPEAN integration , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *LEGAL status of minorities , *FASCISTS , *POLITICIANS - Abstract
Quite a few important Slovene politicians joined the Paneuropean Movement of Count Richard Nikolaus Coudenhove-Kalergi, established in Vienna in the early 1920s. This paper deals mainly with the role of Josip Vilfan, the leading political figure of the Slovene minority in the Fascist Italy and President of the Congress of European Nationalities, within the Paneuropean Union of Coudenhove-Kalergi. Together with Anton Korošec, the leading Slovene politician in Yugoslavia at the time, Vilfan also attended the 1st Congress of the Paneuropean Union in Vienna in October 1926 with representatives from 24 nations. In his paper, written upon personal invitation of Coudenhove-Kalergi, Vilfan described the establishment and initial activities of the Congress of European Nationalities. The Paneuropean Movement was very active in the Interwar-Yugoslavia. The Slovene press welcomed the announcement of the European federation that Aristide Briand drafted in 1930 at the request of the League of Nations. Briand was appointed Honorary President of the Paneuropean Union, and one of the consequences of his initiative was the establishment of the Yugoslav section of the Paneuropean Union, headed by Momčilo Ninčić, former foreign minister of Yugoslavia. The Slovene press covered the sway of Paneuropean Movement with outstanding attention. In October 1932, for example, the leading newspaper Slovenec published a series of articles on the 3rd Congress of the Paneuropean Union in Basel, which Vilfan also attended. However, his role was not so prominent as envisaged initially by Coudenhove-Kalergi. Reading Vilfan's letters to Coudenhove-Kalergi, one gets the impression that Vilfan was not ready to intensify relations between the Paneuropean Union and the Congress of European Nationalities. The expansion of the totalitarian regimes on the eve of the Second World War suppressed the activities of both organizations. In Hitler's "New Order" in Europe, there was no room for the Paneuropean cooperation based on the pr otection of minority rights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. ÂYİNE DERGİSİNDE PORTRE ŞİİRLER.
- Author
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ENER SU, Aydan
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *POETRY writing , *POETS , *POETRY (Literary form) , *AUTHORS , *PORTRAIT painting - Abstract
The inaugural issue of the Ayine newspaper was published on August 18th, 1921 in Istanbul. It was published weekly, on Thursdays and continued with 72 issues. Although, the sub-title of "Ayine" mentions that "it is a humorous newspaper", it would be more accurate to call it a "journal" as it is produced once a week. Yusuf Ziya signed four of the portrait poems in "Ayine" with the penname "Çimdik," while Faruk Nafiz signing as "Çamlıbel" wrote one. They also published one each under their names as "Yusuf Ziya Bey/Portraits" and "Faruk Nafiz Bey/Portraits". This paper transcribed seven portrait poems from the magazine's early issues into Latin letters, and assessed them in light of the writers' personal histories and personas. In particular, the paper tried to determine the humorous element in the poems and nalyse the lements of humor. The examined portrait poems were then compared with the portrait poems written in previous periods, by poets/personalities who were generally loved, considered masters and respected. Thus, one of the aims of the study was to examine how contemporary poets use verse to expose each other's weaknesses/flaws of poets/personalities. This study, therefore, is unique in that it demonstrates via examples how portrait poetry may also be used to address the flaws of the subject's cherished personalities in addition to the praise and glorification of those individuals. The poems under discussion are especially significant since they are original poems at the intersection of under-picture poetry and portrait poetry traditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
30. 300 JOURNALISTS, 100 MEDIA COMPANIES, 1 LEAK.
- Author
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Fenster, Jordan
- Subjects
- *
NEWS agencies , *REPORTERS & reporting , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
The article focuses on the Panama Papers project, an inter-news agency collaboration involving 300 journalists working at more than 100 media properties to investigate data leaked from Mossack Fonseca law firm in Panama. It explores how the project started, the collaboration of journalists, and implications of the project for the newspaper industry. The involvement of the "Miami Herald" newspaper in the project is discussed.
- Published
- 2016
31. Neo-Nazi Heteroactivism and the Swedish Nationalist Contradiction.
- Author
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Lagerman, Julia
- Subjects
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WHITE supremacy , *CRITICAL discourse analysis , *ALTERNATIVE mass media , *NATIONALISTS , *NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
This article is about one of the most violent and visible form anti-LGBTQI activism in Sweden, conducted by Neo-Nazis. Through a critical discourse analysis of 189 texts published in Swedish newspapers and Neo-Nazi alternative media, it argues that contemporary Swedish Neo-Nazi anti-LGBTQI activism draws upon and constructs transnational heteroactivist discourses. They claim to "protect the nuclear family" to deflate accusations of homophobia while gaining substantial visibility through news media covering their actions. The findings demonstrate the three ways Neo-Nazi texts use heteroactivist strategies. First, the texts argue that LGBTQI rights and feminism are societally harmful. Second, through intertextuality they refer to both local and international alternative media as the basis for their arguments. Third, they rationalise homophobic hatred. This paper contributes to discussions of heteroactivism, revealing the need to grapple with the ways it is intertwined with race and nationalism. Empirically, the analysis also highlights the significance of anti-LGBTQI activism in contemporary white power and extreme-right movements. The inclusion of news media texts that frame and represent heteroactivist strategies reveals that, despite their rationalising efforts, Neo-Nazi anti-LGBTQI activism is represented as homophobic and hateful in news and debate articles describing them. Additionally, news media representations of Neo-Nazi heteroactivist discourse present a nationalist contradiction, with authors re-constructing narratives of Sweden as a "LGBT friendly nation", bringing to light complex relations between heteroactivism, homophobia, racism, and nationalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. PAPER CHASE.
- Author
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Reardon, Mary
- Subjects
- *
BUSINESS enterprises , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- - Abstract
The article discusses how newspaper operations dogged by newsprint supply chain snarls and the rising costs of the paper in charge of newsprint supply at our nation's newspapers. Topics include supply-chain disruptions and trucking challenges wrought by the pandemic and the effects of certain geopolitical events; and packaging analysis for Fastmarkets, an information provider for the forest products industry that newspaper operations pros turn to for data.
- Published
- 2022
33. A media event.
- Author
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Hamill, Pete and O'Neil, Michael
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing - Abstract
Features the motion picture `The Paper,' directed by Ron Howard. Author's account of veteran photographer Louis Lotta; Movie's theme; Script of the movie; Movie as a celebration of newspaper publishing. INSETS: Simulating the times, by Martin Kihn.;You are there, by Clare McHugh..
- Published
- 1994
34. Paper Rout.
- Author
-
Alterman, Eric
- Subjects
- *
FINANCIAL crises , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *ONLINE business networks (Social networks) , *SOCIAL networks , *INTERNET advertising , *FINANCE - Abstract
The article discusses the crisis relate to U.S. newspapers in 2016. Topics covered include the slow death of newspapers in the country due to the launch of online resources such as social networking sites. Also mentioned is the impact of the launch of advertising sites such as Craigslist on the demise of U.S. newspapers.
- Published
- 2016
35. Tribune Buys U-T San Diego for $85M: Los Angeles to Run Paper.
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *WEEKLY newspapers , *CORPORATE growth , *MERGERS & acquisitions - Abstract
The article presents a reprint of the article "Tribune Buys U-T San Diego for $85M: Los Angeles to Run Paper," which appeared in the May 11, 2015 issue of the newsletter "News Inc." It discusses the acquisition of the daily newspaper "U-T San Diego" and its affiliated weekly newspapers and websites by diversified media company Tribune Publishing Co. for $85 million in the U.S. Details about the terms of the transaction are given.
- Published
- 2015
36. Las Novedades (Nueva York, 1876-1918) como baluarte de la cultura y la lengua españolas en los Estados Unidos.
- Author
-
García Caba, Marta
- Subjects
- *
LANGUAGE policy , *SPANISH language , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *CULTURAL values , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyse a corpus of 137 texts published between 1888 and 1899. These texts are included in one of the most successful Spanish-language newspapers published in the United States during the second half of the nineteenth century: Las Novedades (New York, 1876-1918). In the analysis I will determine the linguistic ideologies and the discursive strategies used for the promotion of Hispanism and Spanish language in a sociopolitical context in which the Spanish hegemony was losing all its power at an international level. Thus, the ideologies found are divided in two different categories: the linguistic ideologies that give the language a cultural value and the linguistic ideologies that make reference to the economic and commercial value of the language. The results obtained from this analysis will contribute to understand the role of Spanish language in the United States. Furthermore, this paper presents an unpublished corpus of clear historiographic interest that contributes to clarify the panorama of Hispanism in a country like the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
37. HRVATSKE NOVINE U AUSTRALIJI POČETKOM 1930-IH GODINA: NAČINI PROVOĐENJA I IZBJEGAVANJA CENZURE.
- Author
-
Grgić, Ivana Hebrang
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *LANGUAGE & languages , *DATA editing , *ARCHIVAL resources , *NATIVE language , *ARCHIVES , *CATALOGS , *FREEDOM of the press - Abstract
Purpose. The goal of the paper is to identify, investigate and present the official ways of controlling the press in Australia in the 1930s and the ways in which editors and publishers of Croatian newspapers in Australia avoided censorship. This was the time when publications in foreign languages were checked before granting permission to publish, and within the Australian Croatian community the primary language of communication was Croatian. Based on the research, a list of all Croatian newspapers that were published in Australia in the early 1930s is compiled. Approach/methodology/design. The methods used in the research are the method of structured search of online public institutions' catalogues (primarily libraries and archives in Australia), content analysis of archival sources and publications, and the method of involving the Croatian community in Australia. Results. The research resulted in new findings about publications and their editing in the observed period. The social framework for publishing newspapers was researched and presented, and ways to avoid censorship were identified. Each way to avoid censorship is documented and described on the basis of archival sources or a few preserved publications. The research has identified publications that were published in the observed timeframe; the basic data on their publication and editing practices have been investigated. Originality/value. Two publications discovered during the research are described in the paper (Oganj and Iskra). In addition, one publication (one issue of Borba) was found, which was mentioned in the literature, but the bibliographic elements and technical characteristics have never been analysed and the place of storage was not known. All three publications have been digitized and are freely accessible at the links provided in the paper. Furthermore, the research has shown that one publication, which has so far been cited as the publication of Croats in Australia, was not actually published in Australia (Proleter). A list of publications published by Croats in Australia in the early 1930s was compiled on the basis of archival documents, and the ways of conducting and avoiding censorship were presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. WHY SOFT PAPER IS ROUGH ON FORESTS.
- Author
-
Rotide, Mike
- Subjects
- *
WOOD pulp industries & the environment , *TOILET paper , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *CLEARCUTTING , *TAIGAS , *TAIGA ecology , *BLACKBURNIAN warbler , *CARBON sequestration , *PAPER recycling ,ENVIRONMENTAL aspects - Abstract
The article discusses the environmental impacts associated with soft paper manufacturing, noting the acreage of Canada's boreal forest trees lost to paper-making for newspapers and soft toilet tissue. Such paper reportedly is made from wood pulp in virgin or live timber. The effect of clear-cutting such timber on the Blackburnian warbler and other birds is discussed. Other animals potentially affected include caribou, bears, moose, and lynx. Also noted is the high degree of carbon sequestration provided by boreal forests. The Natural Resources Defense Council is cited regarding virgin trees that could be saved with greater use of toilet tissue manufactured from recycled paper.
- Published
- 2010
39. A dobre crise da prensa en papel e o camiño cara a súa recuperación: evolución económica do sector en Galiza (2008-2018).
- Author
-
Rios-Rodríguez, Raul and Dios-Vicente, Adrián
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *CORPORATE finance , *FINANCIAL crises , *OPERATING costs , *PRINTING presses - Abstract
This work deals with the recent economic evolution of print press industry in Galicia. In addition to the general economic crisis of 2008, the sector has suffered its own structural crisis caused by the emergence of the Internet. To study the impact of this double crisis and the response of firms in the industry, we have conducted a financial analysis of 13 Galician newspaper publishing companies during the period 2008-2018, focusing on profitability and its main components. The results show a fall in turnover that extends throughout the whole period, including the economic growth phase, a symptom of the decline of paper as a journalistic medium. However, after a crisis stage characterized by negative profitability, companies were able to recover thanks to a reduction in the volume of total assets and operating costs more intense than the drop in sales, becoming smaller and more efficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Rire du nucléaire au Japon : le dessin dans la presse quotidienne de Hiroshima à Fukushima.
- Author
-
Bruno, Tino
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEAR energy , *NUCLEAR accidents , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *FUKUSHIMA Nuclear Accident, Fukushima, Japan, 2011 , *COMIC books, strips, etc. , *CARTOONISTS ,BOMBARDMENT of Hiroshima, Japan, 1945 - Abstract
Several French cartoons making fun of the Fukushima nuclear disaster have caused public outrage in Japan. While nuclear energy is often considered a sensitive issue iii the country. Japanese press cartoonists have nevertheless played with it in various ways since the post-war period. Through the analysis of cartoons and comic strips (four cell mangas) published in the daily newspapers Asabi, Mainichi. and Yomiuri at seven key dates of the nuclear era— from the atomic bombing of Hiroshima (1945) to the nuclear accident of the Fukushima Daiichi plant (2011)-this paper analyzes how press cartoons were able to provide an original perspective on nuclear news in Japan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Impacto y tratamiento de las acciones artísticas de Banksy en la prensa española.
- Author
-
Mendiguren Galdospin, Terese, Meso Ayerdi, Koldobika, Pérez Dasilva, Jesús, and Ganzábal Learreta, María
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *NEWSPAPERS , *PRESS , *GRAFFITI , *BRAND name products , *HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Introduction: This paper analyzes the impact of the contents about Banksy in the four main Spanish newspapers. The aim is to detect the treatment that the press makes about this figure and determine if these newspapers publish content in the same proportion, which is the main theme, what are the graphic resources they use, if there are evaluative connotations, etc. Methodology: Some of the hypotheses suggest that Banksy manages to put the media focus on the cause that his actions vindicate and that the more conservative newspapers are more critical and limit the space dedicated to him. All the publications that contain the word Banksy have been analyzed with a sheet elaborated ad hoc for this study. A total of 2248 items have been recorded, out of 221 pieces analyzed. Results: The ABC newspaper is where the negative evaluative connotations emerges to a greater extent, but also the one that offers the most space to Banksy or his work, followed by El País. The case claimed by Banksy is barely covered by all the newspapers, being null in the case of El Mundo. Conclusions: It is verified that a conservative newspaper such as ABC does not necessarily limit its space to this type of content. In general, the figure of Banksy and his actions, highly adjectived in all the newspapers, take center stage against the cause that he vindicates. The iconic nature of the Banksy concept, used often by newspapers as a brand, can be confirmed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. HAKAN-I SABIK'TAN HAKAN-I MAĞFUR'A: II. ABDÜLHAMİD'İN ÖLÜMÜNÜN YERLİ VE YABANCI GAZETELERDEKİ YANSIMALARI.
- Author
-
YAVUZ, Fikrettin and İSKEFİYELİ, Zeynep
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *OTTOMAN Empire , *PUBLIC opinion , *EXILE (Punishment) , *PERIODICAL publishing , *REPORTERS & reporting - Abstract
Abdulhamid II, one of the longest reigning sultans of the Ottoman Empire, was dethroned in 1909 after his reign that lasted for about thirty-three years. During his reign, he was exposed to negative accusations and ascriptions in the western public opinion because of the measures taken by him firstly in the Balkan Crisis in the mid-1870's, and then, especially in the Armenian Rebellions of 1890's. For Abdulhamid II, being constantly alienated as the Ottoman Sultan, it was used improper expressions like "Red Sultan", "Great Assassin" and "Abdul the Damned". Newspapers became the main element highlighting this negative image in the western public opinion. The similarity can be observed in the newspapers published by the members of the Young Turk movement. As the opponents of the Sultan, negative publications were made against the Ottoman Sultan in newspapers and magazines firstly published in the Ottoman geography and then in many places abroad, causing the image of Abdulhamid II to develop in a negative way. Abdulhamid II, who was called as "exsultan" after his dethronement both in the Ottoman and western newspapers, lived for nine years in exile at first in Thessaloniki and then at Beylerbeyi Palace. After his death in February 1918, he was reported in the Ottoman newspapers as "hakan-i mağfur/forgiven Sultan" and in the foreign newspapers as "death sultan". In this paper, it is aimed to examine the reflections of the death of Abdulhamid II in the national and foreign newspapers. Ottoman newspapers such as Ati, İkdam, Sabah, Tanin, Tasvir-i Efkar, Tercüman-ı Hakikat, Servet-i Fünun and Vakit and the leading newspapers of British, French and American presses constitute the sources of study. In this frame, it is aimed to describe firstly how Abdulhamid's death and funeral ceremony were portrayed, and secondly to determine whether there is any negative/positive change in their perception of the Sultan image in Turkish and foreign newspapers. Thus, it could be possible to compare Turkish and foreign newspapers' approach towards Abdulhamid after nine years of his dethronement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Cal Samra The Death of the Daily Paper.
- Author
-
Samra, Cal
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *PUBLISHING , *GOVERNMENT & the press , *JOURNALISTIC ethics , *ACCURACY in journalism , *TRUTHFULNESS & falsehood , *MASS media policy - Abstract
The article explores the need for news media to strengthen the objectivity, civility and credibility of its daily paper which is experiencing a collapsing stance in the U.S. A survey conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press indicated that public credibility in all news media is at its lowest level in more than two decades. Ways on how newspapers will regain its stability such as heading towards objective journalism and restoring public trust are offered.
- Published
- 2011
44. Paper Emperors: The Rise of Australia's Newspaper Empires: By Sally Young. Sydney: NewSouth Publishing, 2019. Pp. 654. A$39.99 paper.
- Author
-
Putnis, Peter
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *HISTORY of newspapers , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Future of Newspapers: Will print papers survive in an online world?
- Author
-
Jost, Kenneth
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *BUSINESS planning , *PROFIT margins , *JOURNALISM , *LAYOFFS - Abstract
The nation's $59 billion newspaper industry is facing an uncertain future even while its biggest companies are enjoying enviable profits averaging around 20 percent. Newspaper circulation has been declining for many years, especially among young adults. Now, newspapers are losing readers and some advertising to the Internet. In fact, only 52 percent of adults read the paper on a typical weekday. Many newspapers are working on redesigns aimed at making their print editions more readable. Most also have created Web sites to deliver news and information, including special features and interactive options not included in the print product. But newspaper executives are struggling to incorporate their online editions into viable business plans. Meanwhile, slipping profit margins are resulting in layoffs at several of the major newspaper companies and opening up the country's second-largest -- Knight Ridder -- to a possible takeover. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
46. DOING MORE WITH LESS IN THE PRESSROOM.
- Author
-
PECK, GRETCHEN A.
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *PRINTING properties of paper , *NEWSPAPER buildings - Abstract
The article discusses developments in the newspaper industry in the U.S. as of May 2014, particularly in the adoption of a leaner and greener print manufacturing processes. It cites the claim by Dow Jones & Co. Inc. vice president of production Larry Hoffman that they print "The Wall Street Journal" paper in strategic sites in the country in order to improve efficiency. The opinions of Christopher Apel of "The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel" and Freedom Communications' Rick Sant are also cited.
- Published
- 2014
47. A (some what premature) news paper autopsy: POST MORTEM.
- Author
-
Fishman, Steve
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *NEWSPAPERS , *FINANCE - Abstract
The article focuses on the performance of daily newspaper "The New York Post" under the ownership of mass media company News Corp. The existence of the newspaper for more than two centuries is highlighted. The role of News Corp. chief operating officer (COO) Chase Carey in the potential closure of the daily newspaper is outlined.
- Published
- 2013
48. Scouse Sensation: Liverpool and the Edwardian New Journalism.
- Author
-
Shoop-Worrall, Christopher
- Subjects
- *
CREATIVE nonfiction , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *ELECTIONS , *NEWSPAPERS - Abstract
This paper explores how leading provincial newspapers in Edwardian Liverpool incorporated innovations popularised by the daily mass press into their reporting of election-time politics. Drawn from coverage of four general elections, this paper charts how changes in these Liverpudlian newspapers' political coverage showcased a provincial press that was inspired by powerful national competitors, and utilised some of their innovations to the language and formatting of political reporting to attempt to speak more directly to local readerships. This evolution in content both 'localised' and 'sensationalised' these newspapers' approaches to political reporting, and contributed to a broader, positive recalibration of their purpose as provincial newspapers and their connection to their localities. Through this case study, this paper also challenges historical understandings of the national New Journalism's impact on the provincial newspaper industry, as well as the nature of its political content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Romanian Newspapers Published for Transylvanian Peasants in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century A Theoretical and Thematic Approach.
- Author
-
NICOLAESCU, ALEXANDRU
- Subjects
- *
NEWSPAPER publishing , *NINETEENTH century , *PEASANTS , *PERIODICAL publishing , *ROMANIANS , *MISSION statements , *FREEDOM of the press - Abstract
In the present study, we aim to highlight the main characteristics of the Romanian newspapers published for the Transylvanian peasants in the second half of the nineteenth century. These newspapers were a special type of press dedicated to the rural world, in which various issues were debated, from agriculture, food, and medical care to political and daily news. In the first part of the paper, we analyzed the editorial mission statements of the most important gazettes of the second part of the nineteenth century, such as ªezãtoarea and Cãrþile sãteanului român, which appeared for long periods, but also two examples, Opinca and Gazeta economului, which, despite their transient appearance, fully reflected the message and characteristics of this type of press. In the second part we looked at the main common themes, trying to highlight the major subjects that the Transylvanian Romanian elites wanted to raise in the rural areas. The research capitalized on the articles published in the researched periodicals but also on the specialized literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
50. Between the Universal and the Local.
- Author
-
Gil-Ronen, Ayelet
- Subjects
- *
COMIC books, strips, etc. , *LITERARY criticism , *CHILDREN'S literature , *JEWISH communities , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *SPANISH Civil War, 1936-1939 , *PERIODICAL publishing , *CIVIL war - Abstract
Lea Goldberg played a pivotal role in the children literature arena during the Yishuv period. Beginning in 1936, only a year after her immigration to Mandatory Palestine, Goldberg served as associate-editor for Davar Leyeladim , the leading Hebrew children's weekly, published by the official newspaper of the Histadrut (the General Federation of Labor). Additionally, over 500 hundred of her works for children, including poems, stories, translations, essays, literary criticism for young readers, and even comic strips were published in the magazine. It was a tumultuous era. The Arab Revolt (1936–1939), the outbreak of WWII and the publication of the MacDonald White Paper of 1939 all exerted a direct impact on the Jewish communities in Palestine and abroad. These political and national crises of the day also greatly affected the educational and literary fields. Though most pieces in Davar Leyeladim touched on current events, Goldberg declared her unflagging commitment to aesthetic and humanistic universal values even in those anguished times. The poets' role, she claimed, is to remind their readers what is important and beautiful in the world. Her writings for children epitomized this approach at first, but gradually changed as the war in Europe intensified. The article explores Goldberg's unique treatment of current events in her writings for children, and her efforts to reconcile Labor Zionist ideals and aspirations with her own aesthetic convictions. The conflicts and contradictions between local and universal ideals engendered some of her most fascinating works for children that have not as yet assumed center stage in scholarly research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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